Sunday, February 28, 2010

THE REVENGE OF THE TITANIC

The mighty Titanic ruled the seas for almost four whole days before it struck an iceberg and sank without a trace in the black waters of the northern Atlantic.


A souvenir postcard from the Titanic, found in the coat pocket of Edith Brown, a young girl who was lowered into a lifeboat just before the great ship sank.

The lesson of the Titanic was clear: humans had become so prideful about our little inventions that we lost all perspective about our true place in the universe. The ancient Greeks repeatedly warned us in their tragic plays about the folly of such hubris.

The icebergs must have had a good laugh over our "unsinkable" little boat. Yet, less than a century later those icebergs are getting their asses kicked. Fifty percent of the glaciers have vanished from the face of the earth. We humans scored a TKO in the second round. Who's laughing now?

I was thinking about all this when I recently beta tested a major movie studio's prototype for the next generation of digital drawing tool. The advancements, and the potential, were really quite spectacular.

I am one of those who believes that art has some core attributes that are timeless and immutable, and probably grounded in the designs of nature. Sure, digital engineering has provided us with dazzling alternatives to a pen or brush for making marks on a blank surface, but in my view such tools have so far merely skittered along the surface of art, with no transformative effect on art's underlying values. Today, digital art largely competes in a race where the rules have been established by traditional art. It attempts to satisfy the same standards of design and composition developed by traditional art. As a technique for making marks, digital media have been judged by the same eternal criteria as the marks left by Rembrandt, Michelangelo, or the first cave painters 35,000 years ago.

But as those foolish icebergs learned, eternal truths don't last nearly as long as they once did.

Consider how quickly and pervasively digital media have conquered the world; in most places they are more accessible than a brush and paint.

More pervasive than museums or galleries.

Becoming more pervasive than books.

Consider, too, how talents that once commanded respect in the arts because they were difficult and rare (such as the ability to achieve a good likeness, or the ability to master the color wheel) are no longer so difficult or rare. Chaucer once lamented the burdens of an artist:
The lyf so short, the craft so long to learne,
Th' assay so hard, so sharp the conquerage
Today, when any high school student can photoshop a likeness or rotate through color alternatives with the click of a mouse, can these artistic talents possibly command the same respect from viewers? At the same time certain talents are being devalued, different talents have taken on new significance. Digital media have provided drawing with new criteria for excellence such as motion, lighting variations, integrated media (interweaving drawing with sound, narratives, etc.) and a variety of time-factoring processes.

The yearning to make static drawings move is not new. Some artists achieved it with blurring or speed lines or other illusions of movement. Some did it using sequential images. As a young boy, before the era of animation, the great illustrator Al Parker hit upon the idea of drawing pictures on the paper rolls that operated the keys on his family's old player piano. When his family sat in their parlor listening to the piano, the boy was able to watch his pictures roll by:


Cuddlin' and cooin' with Mary Lou in cherry blossom time

Contrast these early primitive yearnings with the ways Steve Brodner is able to use digital medium to make his pictures move. Here, he paints icebergs but weaves a narrative into an accelerated painting process and ends with animation:



Here is an even more enterprising combination of conventional drawing and the potential of digital media:




Efforts such as the above are early faltering steps, but the devaluation of traditional talents, the rise of new capabilities, and the broad, grass roots accessibility of digital medium may be combining to transform ancient artistic standards. Just as the Titanic got the last laugh, digital media may be the catalyst for an epochal change in art-- as significant as the transition from magical thinking (when animism and totemism ruled art) to art as a physical object. As significant as the transition from representational images to symbolic images. As significant as the invention of writing.


Is that the dripping of melting icebergs I hear?

Saturday, February 27, 2010

Dave McKean



Great link to discover artist Dave McKean:
Seven Impossible Interviews
Before Breakfast #81: Dave McKean


Gripz - Poetic Literature 2: Angels & Demons (2010)




01. Angels Vs Demons Intro (prod. by Anno Domini)
02. Hell’s Highway (prod. by 2Deep)
03. I Wanna Rock Freestyle
04. Microphone Homicide (prod. by 2Deep)
05. ABCs (100 Bars) (prod. by Vherbal)
06. Critics feat. K. Sparks (prod. by One Take)
07. Labor Of Love Music (prod. by Hypnotist)
08. Rhyming Lesson (prod. by 2Deep)
09. Purest Form (prod. by One Take)
10. End You (prod. by Anno Domini)
11. Heaven Vs. Hell (prod. by Anno Domini)
12. Marjorie (prod. by Vherbal)
13. 2DopeBoyz Freestyle feat. Jeff Cherry
14. Where The Break At (prod. by One Take)
15. All I Need (prod. by Vherbal)
16. Bounce To The Beat Like This (prod. by One Take)
17. Untold Story (prod. by 2Deep)
18. Emotions Pt.2 (Rehab) (prod. by 2Deep)
19. Fire (prod. by Vherbal)
20. Rap Revolution (prod. by Anno Domini)
21. Rip
22. Bonus Track: Pussy Heaven (prod. by Anno Domini)


Gripz - Poetic Literature (2009)




01. DJ Heat And DJ Whiteowl Intro (prod. by Hynotist Beats)
02. Intro (prod. by Vherbal)
03. Hate (prod. by 2Deep)
04. Check My Flow (prod. by Vherbal)
05. DJ Heat And DJ Whiteowl Skit #1 (prod. by Hypnotist Beats)
06. 40 Bars Of Crack (prod. by Street Level)
07. Maryland Connection feat. Wordsmith (prod. by Street Level)
08. Barz feat. Paysoz & Wordsmith (prod. by Anno Domini)
09. If Ya Fam Died (prod. by Vherbal)
10. DJ Heat And DJ Whiteowl Skit #2 (prod. by Hypnotist Beats)
11. Emotions (prod. by Sinima Beats)
12. Nah Right feat. Sic Osyrus (prod. by Anno Domini)
13. NBA feat. Jay Rock (prod. by Anno Domini)
14. Rap Genius (prod. by Vherbal)
15. DJ Heat And DJ Whiteowl Skit #3 (prod. by Hypnotist Beats)
16. Buzzin (prod. by Hypnotist Beats)
17. This Is My Kingdom (prod. by Street Level)
18. O'D (prod. by Anno Domini)
19. This Is Life (prod. by Vherbal)
20. 32 Bars And 32 Clint Eastwood Movies (Prod. by Anno Domini)
21. Stranger (prod. by Anno Domini)
22. Instrumental Murderer (prod. by Hypnotist Beats)
23. DJ Heat And DJ Whiteowl Outro (Prod. by Hypnotist Beats)

Elusive - District 2 District (2010)



01. Intro feat. Bruce Hathcock
02. District 2 District feat. Planet Asia & Ricky General
03. What Y'all Chasing feat. Royce Da 5'9", Naptron & Bruce Hathcock
04. Too Many feat. Casual
05. What's Poppin feat. Whosane
06. To The Top feat. Main Flow & Omega Red
07. Danger feat. Trensetta
08. What It Do feat. Prince Po
09. Get Clapped Up feat. Naptron & C France
10. Green Berets feat. Planet Asia
11. Rhyme Games feat. Gift Of Gab & Whosane
12. Gangstas feat. Killah Priest, Ras Kass & Ricky General
13. Paper Chasing feat. Neb Luv & Naptron
14. Last Bar feat. Planet Asia
15. Situation Critical feat. Lady G & Whosane
16. Bomb Hard feat. El Da Sensei
17. On Lock feat. Main Flow & Whosane
18. Change The Game feat. Naptron & C France
19. Cold Wit It feat. Lady G & Trenseta

Jazsapiens - Elevator Music (2009)




01.Elevator Music (Performed by G-O)
02.Jazzercise 1 - Do The Jazsapien
03.Identity [Formation]
04.Survival Of the Sickest (feat. Ego)
05.T.o.Y. Soldiers (feat. Mint)
06.Concept [Re-formation] (Scratches by DJ Empty)
07.To The Sea, To The Sky
08.Jazzercise 2 - Shake Dat J-Azz
09.Starving Artist (feat. Dumbfoundead)
10.Player
11.Culture Shock (feat. Tier2, Scratches by DJ Empty)
12.Definitive Cool (feat. Mint & Obi Juan of Sunfloweer Samurai)
13.Flowers By The Sidewalk
14.Sidewalk Letters
15.Awakening [Trans-formation]
16.Elevator Stop
17.Killer Concept [Bonus]
18.To The Sea, To The Sky (Remix)[Bonus]

Friday, February 26, 2010

The afterthought experience

Do you know Tino Sehgal? You know, the artist that doesn't allow any pictures taken of his works? And doesn't write any introduction, or artist statement? Or make written agreements with museums? That wants no material artifacts in his works?
Does it matter what the works are?
They are performative. More: they are performances. They are people doing things in exhibition spaces. They are things happening with people within an exhibition framework.
They could be happening to others (say, someone kissing). Or to you (say, someone talking with you).
You might never discover which part was the work. Yet somehow, you often do.

Once again: Does it matter what the works are? Once you experience something, what good is the analysis?
But we are pretty smart animals. We may experience, and still want to think about it. We may want to decide what we think, and if we will go to see this thing again or not. We may rework this experience in our mind until we decide, say, that this is just not enough. That a good ice-cream would have done the job. Or a meeting with a friend. Or both combined. Maybe in a museum. Maybe accompanied by a stranger, having a conversation about progress. The luxury of conversational art. Now isn't that progressive.

Then again, what is wrong with living a series of perfectly good conversations put into a gentle, clean formal frame? Can't we just accept this? What is it that makes one (me) so voracious?
Is it the fact I've never actually seen a Sehgal, done a Sehgal?
Isn't the picture enough?
Or the reviews that seem to make a huge effort in taking the mimetic weight off the image and putting some of it on words?
Paradoxically, all the effort put into keeping it live seem to make us focus not on the thing, but on this very effort. Would Tino Sehgal be at the Guggenheim had he allowed taking pictures? So what exactly is the work, here? How come I feel it so clearly, if it's all about presence? Or am I just feeling its double, its fake, the afterthought? But isn't that crucial in experience? Doesn't that re-constitute the experience once it is over? Can one re-construct something one did not experienced in the first place?
You would have to have been there. The most dreaded sentence in the world. What are we supposed to do with it? Take a hidden snapshot?

Tino Sehgal is on at the New York Guggenheim until March 10.

The afterthought experience

Do you know Tino Sehgal? You know, the artist that doesn't allow any pictures taken of his works? And doesn't write any introduction, or artist statement? Or make written agreements with museums? That wants no material artifacts in his works?
Does it matter what the works are?
They are performative. More: they are performances. They are people doing things in exhibition spaces. They are things happening with people within an exhibition framework.
They could be happening to others (say, someone kissing). Or to you (say, someone talking with you).
You might never discover which part was the work. Yet somehow, you often do.

Once again: Does it matter what the works are? Once you experience something, what good is the analysis?
But we are pretty smart animals. We may experience, and still want to think about it. We may want to decide what we think, and if we will go to see this thing again or not. We may rework this experience in our mind until we decide, say, that this is just not enough. That a good ice-cream would have done the job. Or a meeting with a friend. Or both combined. Maybe in a museum. Maybe accompanied by a stranger, having a conversation about progress. The luxury of conversational art. Now isn't that progressive.

Then again, what is wrong with living a series of perfectly good conversations put into a gentle, clean formal frame? Can't we just accept this? What is it that makes one (me) so voracious?
Is it the fact I've never actually seen a Sehgal, done a Sehgal?
Isn't the picture enough?
Or the reviews that seem to make a huge effort in taking the mimetic weight off the image and putting some of it on words?
Paradoxically, all the effort put into keeping it live seem to make us focus not on the thing, but on this very effort. Would Tino Sehgal be at the Guggenheim had he allowed taking pictures? So what exactly is the work, here? How come I feel it so clearly, if it's all about presence? Or am I just feeling its double, its fake, the afterthought? But isn't that crucial in experience? Doesn't that re-constitute the experience once it is over? Can one re-construct something one did not experienced in the first place?
You would have to have been there. The most dreaded sentence in the world. What are we supposed to do with it? Take a hidden snapshot?

Tino Sehgal is on at the New York Guggenheim until March 10.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

The End Is Never Nigh (A few sentences that never made it elsewhere)

Bloodshedding pieces of black-and-white happiness.
The unfair balance of the picture.

The wider picture. The bloody wider picture always giving it the color that wasn't there in the first place.
Notice: the wider picture is never the first place. It comes as we back up, until we are nowhere to be found, impressed by the relation of the Thing with that wide horizon, that swift encompassing of the Other into the Thing.

The unfair balance of the picture. Nothing should ever be framed. Frames should be prohibited, forcing us into oblivion, into focusing on the End nearest us. Who knows how many Santa Clauses are necessary?

The unfair balance of the picture.

The pictures are by, in order of appearance, Diane Arbus, Mikołaj Chylak, Diane Arbus, Fischli & Weiss.

The End Is Never Nigh (A few sentences that never made it elsewhere)

Bloodshedding pieces of black-and-white happiness.
The unfair balance of the picture.

The wider picture. The bloody wider picture always giving it the color that wasn't there in the first place.
Notice: the wider picture is never the first place. It comes as we back up, until we are nowhere to be found, impressed by the relation of the Thing with that wide horizon, that swift encompassing of the Other into the Thing.

The unfair balance of the picture. Nothing should ever be framed. Frames should be prohibited, forcing us into oblivion, into focusing on the End nearest us. Who knows how many Santa Clauses are necessary?

The unfair balance of the picture.

The pictures are by, in order of appearance, Diane Arbus, Mikołaj Chylak, Diane Arbus, Fischli & Weiss.

Monday, February 22, 2010

More Gentle Uncertainty



Video directed by Takafumi Tsuchiya (TAKCOM).

More Gentle Uncertainty



Video directed by Takafumi Tsuchiya (TAKCOM).

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Laurie Lipton


Love Bite by Laurie Lipton

Friday, February 19, 2010

Love to Death

At last, Taxidermy Art is here. From jewelry to Christ's thorn crown made of chicken feet.



http://lovedtodeath.net/

Cal Lane



http://www.callane.com/

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Another childish question inspired by a beautiful project

What is it that we like about simplicity? Is it not that it's close to us? It is attainable, like something that is nearly us. Or, to put it differently - an it that almost makes it into me. Thus, an imaginary community. Yes, if I dared, I would say simplicity gives us an imaginary community. A universe we don't need to adhere to, as it has already adhered to us.



The video, directed by Johannes Nyholm, is both a music video for Little Dragon, and a pilot of Nyholm's short film Dreams from The Woods.

Another childish question inspired by a beautiful project

What is it that we like about simplicity? Is it not that it's close to us? It is attainable, like something that is nearly us. Or, to put it differently - an it that almost makes it into me. Thus, an imaginary community. Yes, if I dared, I would say simplicity gives us an imaginary community. A universe we don't need to adhere to, as it has already adhered to us.



The video, directed by Johannes Nyholm, is both a music video for Little Dragon, and a pilot of Nyholm's short film Dreams from The Woods.

Visit


Two pictures from the Visit series (2007/8) by Filip Berendt.
The idea is so simple and to the point that it is irritating. Berendt put an ad in a newspaper saying he wants to make installations in people's homes out of the things he finds there and take pictures of them. Some people answered. He went to their homes, and, well, did what he said he would do.
The series won him the Sittcomm award last year.

Visit


Two pictures from the Visit series (2007/8) by Filip Berendt.
The idea is so simple and to the point that it is irritating. Berendt put an ad in a newspaper saying he wants to make installations in people's homes out of the things he finds there and take pictures of them. Some people answered. He went to their homes, and, well, did what he said he would do.
The series won him the Sittcomm award last year.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

The Landscape Is You

Two gorgeous 2009 Szpilman Award candidates:
The runner-up, Alexander Thieme with his Embedded


... and this year's winner, Hank Schmidt in der Beek, with In den Zillertaler Alpen






Can you spot me?
What am I, within this overwhelming sight?
Am I a humble creature? Do I not see myself?
Or is it but a false humility, a false erasing of the onlooker's look?
--
I was told twice in the last two days that one should not make art in anyone else's name but her own.
You want it - you have it.
Hank Schmidt In Der Beek, you have just made my day.

Other candidates can be found here. Also check out their blog.

The Landscape Is You

Two gorgeous 2009 Szpilman Award candidates:
The runner-up, Alexander Thieme with his Embedded


... and this year's winner, Hank Schmidt in der Beek, with In den Zillertaler Alpen






Can you spot me?
What am I, within this overwhelming sight?
Am I a humble creature? Do I not see myself?
Or is it but a false humility, a false erasing of the onlooker's look?
--
I was told twice in the last two days that one should not make art in anyone else's name but her own.
You want it - you have it.
Hank Schmidt In Der Beek, you have just made my day.

Other candidates can be found here. Also check out their blog.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Dreaming the book



Le Monde des Montagnes (The World of Mountains), an ECAL graduate project by Camille Scherrer

Nothing to stop us from getting lost. From deciding we no longer belong here, and using all our knowledge and craft to make this place just confusing enough to dream.
Be it an augmented reality, be it a book, a picture that can actually be moving. Be it our imposing of what's in our head, or rather, what dropped by for just a second, only to fool us into believing we own it, we are it.
Nothing to stop us from finding our way. With every single hesitating step we so confidently make into this our augmented reality, with more of you than I could ever have hoped for, with less of me than you would expect, with just enough of us to get the picture.
And move on. As if nothing really happened. As if.

(via)

Dreaming the book



Le Monde des Montagnes (The World of Mountains), an ECAL graduate project by Camille Scherrer

Nothing to stop us from getting lost. From deciding we no longer belong here, and using all our knowledge and craft to make this place just confusing enough to dream.
Be it an augmented reality, be it a book, a picture that can actually be moving. Be it our imposing of what's in our head, or rather, what dropped by for just a second, only to fool us into believing we own it, we are it.
Nothing to stop us from finding our way. With every single hesitating step we so confidently make into this our augmented reality, with more of you than I could ever have hoped for, with less of me than you would expect, with just enough of us to get the picture.
And move on. As if nothing really happened. As if.

(via)

Sunday, February 14, 2010

Saturday, February 13, 2010

The unwearable jewel





I love the CRA$H jewellery collection by Super Fertile because it's impossible to wear. Poor people can't afford it. Rich people would never dare.
So who is it for?
For us, of course.

The unwearable jewel





I love the CRA$H jewellery collection by Super Fertile because it's impossible to wear. Poor people can't afford it. Rich people would never dare.
So who is it for?
For us, of course.